Business continuity (BC) and disaster recovery (DR) are closely related practices that support an organization’s ability to remain operational after an adverse event.
Resiliency has become the watchword for organizations facing an array of threats, from natural disasters to the latest round of cyberattacks.
BC and DR are closely related practices that support an organization’s ability to remain operational after an adverse event. The goal of BCDR is to limit risk and get an organization running as close to normal as possible after an unexpected interruption. These practices enable an organization to get back on its feet after problems occur, reduce the risk of data loss and reputational harm, and improve operations while decreasing the chance of emergencies.
The role of BCDR is to minimize the effects of outages and disruptions on business operations. BCDR practices enable an organization to get back on its feet after problems occur, reduce the risk of data loss and reputational harm, and improve operations while decreasing the chance of emergencies.
Minimizes downtime
Facilitates the consolidation and the failover of servers
Effectively manages a wide range of applications in heterogeneous environments
Provides data integrity protection through I/O fencing
Provides High Availability of applications
Provides improved storage I/O performance with load balancing
Provides storage path failure protection and fast failover
Centralizes storage path management regardless of operating system or storage hardware
- Heterogeneous resiliency across on premise and cloud platforms
- Supports physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure
- Non-disruptive rehearsals expose the complexity slowing down your business
- Measure risk in real time to support business decisions
- Granular visibility across your entire estate, applications or individual virtual machines
- Automation that minimizes the business impact of people and processes